READ THE REVIEWS:

June 19, 2011

Now that Joely Richardson has returned to the New York theater, I have just one question: Can we keep her? Seen Off Broadway a decade ago as the older woman in Macaulay Culkin’s life in “Madame Melville,” Ms. Richardson has since become best known for her work on television (“Nip/Tuck,” “The Tudors”).

READ THE REVIEW
Associated Press
BigThumbs_UP

Jennifer
Farrar

June 19, 2011

Watching a married couple arguing can be uncomfortable, and marital strife has been the subject of many good plays, most notably "Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" by Edward Albee.

READ THE REVIEW

June 19, 2011

Sequels to plays and musicals are usually not a good idea – the results tend to be even worse than film sequels. Some well-known examples include "Annie 2: Miss Hannigan’s Revenge," "Bring Back Birdie" and "Love Never Dies," Andrew Lloyd Webber’s recently penned continuation of "Phantom of the Opera."

READ THE REVIEW

June 20, 2011

Michael Weller puts a well-heeled couple’s decaying marriage and their curiously symbiotic relationship under the microscope in Side Effects, now being presented by MCC Theater at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in Greenwich Village.

READ THE REVIEW
Backstage
BigThumbs_UP

David
Sheward

June 19, 2011

The plot synopsis in the press release for Michael Weller’s "Side Effects" did not get me excited. How many times have we seen a two-character play about the breakup of a marriage with lots of screaming and throwing of objects? Weller himself has mined this genre already with "Fifty Words," which was presented by the same company, MCC Theater, in the same theater, the Lucille Lortel, three years ago. But then I recalled that "Fifty Words" was much more than a two-handed shouting match and provided complex, deeply etched characterizations of its central couple. So does "Side Effects."

READ THE REVIEW